Название: The Spurgeon Series 1859 & 1860
Автор: Charles H. Spurgeon
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Религия: прочее
Серия: Spurgeon's Sermons
isbn: 9781614582083
isbn:
10. You may know a hypocrite by another sign. His religion depends upon the place, or upon the time of day. He rises at seven o’clock perhaps, and you will find him religious for a quarter of an hour; for he is, as the boy said, “saying his prayers to himself” in the first part of the morning. Well, then you find him pretty pious for another half hour, for there is family prayer; but when the business begins, and he is talking to his men, I will not guarantee that you will be able to admire him. If one of his employees has been doing something a little amiss, you will find him perhaps using angry and unworthy language. You will find him too, if he gets a customer whom he thinks to be rather green, not quite pious, for he will be taking him in. You will find, too, that if he sees a good chance at any hour of the day, he will be very ready to do something underhanded. He was a saint in the morning, for there was nothing to be lost by it; but he has a religion that is not too strict; business is business, he says, and he puts religion aside by stretching his conscience, which is made of very elastic material. Well, some time in the evening you will find him very pious again, unless he is out on a journey, where neither wife, nor family, nor church can see him, and you will find him at a theatre. He would not go if there was a chance of the minister hearing of it, for then he would be excommunicated, but he does not mind going when the eye of the church or any of his friends is not upon him. Fine clothes make fine gentlemen, and fine places make fine hypocrites; but the man who is true to his God and to his conscience, is a Christian all day, and all night long, and a Christian everywhere. “Though you were to fill my house full of silver and gold,” he says, “I would not do anything underhanded; though you should give me the stars and the countless wealth of empires, yet I would not do what would dishonour God, or disgrace my profession.” Put the true Christian where he might sin, and be praised for it, and he will not do it. He does not hate sin, for the sake of the company, but he hates it for its own sake. He says, “How can I do this great wickedness and sin against God?” You shall find him a fallible man, but not a false man, you shall find him full of infirmities, but not of intentional lust and of deliberate iniquity. As a Christian, you must follow Christ in the mire as well as in the meadows; you must walk with him in the rain as well as in the sunshine; you must go with him in the storm as well as in fair weather. He is no Christian who cannot walk with Christ, come rags, come poverty, come contumely or shame. He is the hypocrite who can walk with Christ in silver slippers, and leave him when it becomes necessary for him to go barefoot. The hypocrite’s religion is like a chameleon, it takes its colour from the light which falls upon it, but the Christian’s religion is always the same. Is this true then of any of us? Can we say we desire to be always the same? Or do we change with our company and with the times? If so, we are confessed hypocrites, and let us own up to it before God, and may God make us sincere.
11. There is another sign of the hypocrite, and now the lash will fall on my own back, and on most of us too. Hypocrites, and other people besides hypocrites, are generally severe with others, and very lenient with themselves. Have you ever heard a hypocrite describe himself? I describe him thus: — you are a mean, beggarly fellow. “No,” he says, “I am not; I am economical.” I say to him, “You are dishonest, you are a thief.” “No,” he says, “I am only cute and sharp for the times.” “Well, but,” I say to him, “you are proud and conceited.” “Oh!” he says, “I have only a proper and manly respect.” “Indeed, but you are a fawning, cringing fellow.” “No,” he says, “I am all things to all men.” Somehow or other he will make vice look like a virtue in himself, but he will deal by the reverse rule with others. Show him a Christian who is really humble, and he says, “I hate his fawning ways.” Tell him there is one who is very courageous for Christ; “Oh! he is impudent,” he says. Show him one who is generous, doing what he can for his Master’s service, spending, and being spent for him; “Rash and imprudent,” he says, “extravagant; the man does not know what he is doing.” You may point out a virtue, and the hypocrite shall at once say it is a vice. Have you ever seen a hypocrite turn doctor? He has a fine beam in his eye, large enough to shut out the light of heaven from his soul, but nevertheless he is a very skilful oculist. He waits upon some poor brother, whose eye is a little affected with a mote so tiny that the full blaze of the sun can scarcely reveal it. Look at our beam eyed friend, he puts on a knowing look, and cries, “Allow me to extract this mote for you?” “You hypocrite! first cast the beam out of your own eye, and then you shall see clearly to cast the mote out of your brother’s eye.” There are people of that sort who make virtues in others into vices, and vices in themselves they transform into virtues. Now, if you are a Christian, I will tell you what will be your spirit, it will be the very reverse; you will be always making excuses for others, but you will never be making excuses for yourself. The true Christian, if he sees himself sin, mourns over it, and makes much ado concerning it. He says to another, “Oh! I feel so sinful”; and the other one cries “I cannot really see it; I can see no sin in you; I could wish I were holy as you.” “No,” says the other, “but I am full of infirmity.” John Bunyan describes Mercy, and Christiana, and the children, after having been washed in the bath, and sealed with the seal, as coming up out of the water, and being all fair and lovely to look upon; and one began to say to the other, “You are fairer than I!” and “You are more comely than I!” said another. And then each began to bemoan their own spots, and to praise the beauty of the others. That is the spirit of a Christian; but the spirit of the hypocrite is the very reverse; he will judge, and condemn, and punish with lynch law every other man; and as for himself, he is exempt, he is a king, СКАЧАТЬ